Alexandria Young
- younga at bournemouth dot ac dot uk
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Journal Articles
- Young, A., Stillman, R., Smith, M.J., Korstjens, A.H., 2016. Applying Knowledge of Species-Typical Scavenging Behavior to the Search and Recovery of Mammalian Skeletal Remains. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 61 (2), 458-466.
- Young, A., Stillman, R., Smith, M.J., Korstjens, A.H., 2015. Scavenger species-typical alteration to bone: using bite mark dimensions to identify scavengers. Journal of Forensic Sciences.
- Young, A., Stillman, R., Smith, M.J., Korstjens, A.H., 2014. An experimental study of vertebrate scavenging behavior in a Northwest European woodland context. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 59 (5), 1333-1342.
- Young, A., Stillman, R., Smith, M.J., Korstjens, A., Marquez-Grant, N., 2014. An investigation of red fox (Vulpes vulpes) and Eurasian badger (Meles meles) scavenging, scattering and removal of deer remains: forensic implications and applications. Journal of Forensic Sciences.
- Young, Stillman, R., Smith, M., Korstjens, A., 2014. Scavenging in Northwestern Europe: A Survey of UK Police Specialist Search Officers. Policing (Oxford): a journal of policy and practice, 8 (2), 156-164.
- Moffat, A.C., Osselton, M.D., Widdop, B., Clarke, E.G.C.. Clarke's analysis of drugs and poisons. Pharmaceutical Pr.
Theses
- Young. An Investigation of patterns of mammalian scavenging in relation to vertebrate skeletal remains in a Northwestern European context: forensic applications. Bournemouth University, School of Applied Sciences.
PhD Students
- Alexandria Young, 2013. An Investigation of patterns of mammalian scavenging in relation to vertebrate skeletal remains in a Northwestern European context: forensic applications
The data on this page was last updated at 05:00 on February 17, 2026.